Examples — Charts

LaTeX can be used to produce a variety of different charts and diagrams, including: flowcharts, gantt charts, pie charts, branching and decision trees, family trees, histograms, bar charts and more. If you're looking for a particular type of chart that isn't featured here, please let us know, or submit your own example to the gallery.

These examples show how to make Gantt charts for project planning in LaTeX with the pgfgantt package. They are from the package documentation. The pgfgantt package provides many useful macros for generating the calendar for the Gantt chart for either absolute or relative dates. It also provides macros for grouping and linking tasks, and for full control over the styling of the chart.

pgf-pie is a LaTeX package for drawing pie charts (and some interesting variants on pie charts) with the PGF/TikZ graphics package.
The examples in this document are from the pgf-pie manual, version 0.2.
The source code for pgf-pie is available at http://code.google.com/p/pgf-pie/.

This is a direct copy of the codes in section 2.9 of the pgfgantt package
documentation (See page 45)
except the color setting.
Alone with this one,
this examples shows how to make Gantt charts for project planning in LaTeX with the pgfgantt package. They are from the package documentation. The pgfgantt package provides many useful macros for generating the calendar for the Gantt chart for either absolute or relative dates. It also provides macros for grouping and linking tasks, and for full control over the styling of the chart.

This is an example for re-creating gnuplot charts with tikz on LaTeX, made possible by adding gnuplot-lua-tikz.sty and gnuplot-lua-tikz-common.tex to your project. (These files can be generated by invoking lua gnuplot-tikz.lua style where gnuplot-tikz.lua can be found in $GNUPLOT/lua/gnuplot-tikz.lua.
(This will work with all engines, not just LuaLaTeX!)